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Internet Security and Privacy
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McAfee Internet Security 5.0
Computer Viruses and the Web
A computer virus is a small computer program that automatically replicates 
itself and spreads from one computer to another. Viruses may infect 
programs, your hard drive, and even some document files that employ 
macros. Viruses do not infect data files, but they can create problems that 
prevent you from accessing your data. Viruses are not accidents—they are 
always created by computer programmers. PC viruses are similar to biological 
viruses in that they:
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Are spread from host to host—the “host,” in this instance, is your PC.
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Are very good at reproducing themselves.
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Can wreak havoc on an infected host system.
Biological viruses have proven to be tenacious— modern medicine’s success 
in fighting viral infection has, so far, been rather limited. Fortunately, PC 
viruses differ from biological viruses in that they are easier to combat, once 
they are identified. 
Are viruses really that dangerous?
Bear in mind that your chances of contracting a PC virus are slim, and even 
more so, your chances of contracting a truly vicious virus. The scariest viruses 
are malicious programs that intentionally corrupt or delete the data on your 
PC. More benign viruses might simply display a message on your monitor or 
make a strange sound, and then disappear. But even the most benign virus 
occupies some disk space, and many remain in memory, which can cause your 
PC to crash or behave erratically. 
Types of Viruses
There are three main types of viruses:
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File or program viruses
: A program virus attaches itself to a specific 
program on your PC. Since many PC’s share certain files in common (for 
example, the DOS program command.com, or the command “dir”), 
which make these files tempting targets for virus programmers. 
Program viruses are dormant until you run the associated program.
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Boot viruses (or Master Boot Record viruses)
: The boot sector of a disk 
is a physical location on the disk that contains information about the disk 
and the files it contains. All disks and drives have a boot sector, even if 
they aren’t “bootable.” A boot virus infects the boot sector of floppy 
disks and hard drives, and are activated when you access or boot from 
an afflicted disk.